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Reporting to WHO

Date post: 04-Jan-2016
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Reporting to WHO. Death certificate  National statistics  WHO International Classification of Disease (ICD) All poisonings Drug poisonings Drug abuse/dependence Each country identifies deaths differently Just because a drug is present in a death, doesn’t mean it caused the death. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Reporting to WHO • Death certificate National statistics WHO • International Classification of Disease (ICD) – All poisonings – Drug poisonings – Drug abuse/dependence • Each country identifies deaths differently • Just because a drug is present in a death, doesn’t mean it caused the death
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Page 1: Reporting to WHO

Reporting to WHO

• Death certificate National statistics WHO• International Classification of Disease (ICD)– All poisonings– Drug poisonings– Drug abuse/dependence

• Each country identifies deaths differently• Just because a drug is present in a death,

doesn’t mean it caused the death

Page 2: Reporting to WHO

Possible Overdose DeathsCountry Year(s) Deaths/year

(average)Rate per 100,000

All Poisonings

Drug Poisonings

Drug Abuse

Russia 1999-2004 6,250 4.3 Kazakhstan 2004 440 2.9 Tajikistan 1981-2001 117 2.2 Kyrgyzstan 2000-2004 45 0.92 Georgia 1998-2001 5 0.11

All Poisonings (includes not from drugs)

Russia 1999-2004 66,906 46.5 Ukraine 1981-2004 12,002 23.8 Kazakhstan 2004 3,285 21.9

Low Data Quality

China 1987-1999 6,190* * Urban areas representing approximately 10% of the population

Page 3: Reporting to WHO

drug user surveys

hospital data

ambulance

Page 4: Reporting to WHO

Project Lazarus

Wilkes County, North Carolina, USAsource + more info at projectlazarus.org

Page 5: Reporting to WHO

source + more info at projectlazarus.org

Page 6: Reporting to WHO

source + more info at projectlazarus.org

Page 7: Reporting to WHO

source + more info at projectlazarus.org

Page 8: Reporting to WHO

source + more info at projectlazarus.org

Page 9: Reporting to WHO

source + more info at projectlazarus.org

Page 10: Reporting to WHO

Why Data Matters

• Collecting information on overdoses and overdose reversals can help your clients, your program and your country’s health policy.

• Applications of data:– Client feedback & starting dialogue– Program planning– Grant writing– Policy/advocacy– Program evaluation

Page 11: Reporting to WHO

What Data Tell Us

• What’s the problem?• Is it different now than it was in the past?• Is it different for different people?• Is it different from my place to your place?• What can we do now to intervene?• Did we fix it?

Page 12: Reporting to WHO

Translating Street to Science

4. Information is provided to politicians, medical providers, law enforcement, funders [once per year]

1. Clients interviewed by outreach workers[every day]

2. Paper forms collected and data entered in computer [once or twice per month]

3. Data are analyzed and reports written [twice per year]

Page 13: Reporting to WHO

Putting Numbers into Words - 1

• Alliance (Ukraine) Baseline Questionnaire• Can be used to describe the problem

• “Our clients have experienced ____ [Q10a] overdoses in the past 6 months, and witnessed ____ [Q13a] overdoses. Overdose is a significant problem in our community.”

Page 14: Reporting to WHO

Putting Numbers into Words - 2

• Alliance (Ukraine) Naloxone Refill Questionnaire

• Can be used to promote/evaluate the program

• “Our clients witnessed or gave naloxone ____ [Q12] times since [date]. In ____% [Q16] of the cases, the person lived. Our clients can effectively use naloxone to prevent overdose deaths.”


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